Banking on the herd: How ancient manure techniques outlast modern droughts in Zambia
Farmers in Zambia’s Kadiani Village are combating climate change and soil degradation by reverting to "kraal shifting," a traditional practice using manure to fertilize sandy soil, which improves moisture retention during droughts. By communal sharing of livestock for this process, the village increases resilience against the high costs and diminishing returns of chemical fertilizers. This episode is hosted by Ivy Prosper, produced by Claire Hutcheon, and edited by John McGill. This episode was produced by Farm Radio International, thanks to funding from the Government of Canada

▶︎
Waves of Change How Radio Broadcasts Are Reshaping Zambian Agriculture

▶︎
400 Expensive Agricultural Machines Working At Another Level!

▶︎
Sarah Paine — The war for India (Lecture & interview)

▶︎
What do tech pioneers think about the AI revolution? - The Engineers, BBC World Service

▶︎
25 Buddhist Stories for Every Kind of Human Struggle

▶︎
360,000 Hectares of Farming, Robots, Crop Planes & Cotton Factories

▶︎
God Says:"TAKE THIS MESSAGE SERIOUSLY, BECAUSE ONLY YOU ARE SEEING IT"/God Message Now/God Message

▶︎
What do trees have to do with rain?

▶︎
Historian Timothy Snyder on ENDING Trump Nightmare FOR GOOD | PoliticsGirl

▶︎
Season 3 Episode 1 - From skepticism to sustainability: rebuilding a climate-ready community

▶︎
How Singapore’s Urban Design Makes Way for Wildlife | WILD HOPE

▶︎
Britain Sold Palestine to Pay Its WWI Debt. The Balfour Declaration Was a Banking Deal!

▶︎
Ponds of Promise: How One Village Is Farming Its Future Season 3 Episode 3

▶︎
Beautiful Relaxing Music - Stop Overthinking, Stress Relief Music, Sleep Music, Calming Music #177

▶︎
The Passage of Time and the Meaning of Life | Sean Carroll

▶︎
Isolated for 6 years, she lives ALONE in the mountains, with no electricity! Alina's story

▶︎
Nothing about the honey badger is normal... and here is why

▶︎
From insurgency to opportunity how reforestation is building a better life in Alebelebe

▶︎
Farmer groups responding to Climate with Nature-based Solutions in Chikankata

▶︎
